From Clinician to Founder: How Taylor Siemens Is Redefining Leadership in Aesthetic Medicine
As the founder of Kairos Aesthetic Medicine, Taylor Siemens, NP, represents a new archetype in the industry: the clinician-operator-entrepreneur who understands how to treat patients, plus how to build a business, lead a team, and design a practice with intention. Her journey offers both inspiration and a roadmap for aesthetic clinicians looking to advance into leadership.
A Career Built on Intention
Even before stepping into aesthetics, she understood that the most impactful leaders in medicine are those who can bridge clinical excellence with business acumen. Mentorship early in her career reinforced that pursuit, guiding her toward a path that would allow both: nursing for clinical credibility, paired with the flexibility to develop entrepreneurial skills.
“I came into this industry knowing that this is really what I wanted to do,” she explained, noting that few people truly understand both sides of the equation.
Learning to Think Beyond the Treatment Room
As she moved into operational leadership within a multi-location aesthetic practice, her role expanded far beyond patient care. She was suddenly responsible for scaling systems, managing teams, and maintaining consistency across multiple locations. At one point, she helped oversee a team of more than 60 people.
That environment required an operational shift to focus on standardized protocols, brand consistency and scalability.
“You build differently when the goal is scale,” she reflected.
A Different Kind of Leadership
When Siemens opened Kairos Aesthetic Medicine, she deliberately chose to build something different.
After years of scaling quickly, she found herself drawn to a more personalized, intentional approach. Her team size dropped from 60 to four, and the priorities changed just as dramatically.
Where her previous work emphasized perfection and scalability, Kairos focused on connection.
In the early days, the clinic wasn’t polished and the design was unfinished. But patients showed up anyway.
To Siemens, that demonstrated that in medical aesthetics, the experience matters far more than the aesthetics of the space.
“Patients just really want to be seen and cared for,” she said.
Owning the Culture
One of the most significant shifts in Siemens’ leadership came with ownership.
“In any practice, the owner is responsible for culture,” she explains.
That meant attracting team members who shared her values, building systems collaboratively, and establishing a workplace where staff felt invested in the outcome.
The result has been a more aligned, cohesive team. Siemens is building alongside people who actively want to be part of what she’s creating.
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Building a Practice Patients Want to Grow
If there’s one defining feature of Kairos, it’s the level of patient engagement. Practice growth has leaned heavily on education, social media, and authentic patient relationships.
Siemens is open with her patients: this is a new practice, and their support matters. That transparency has created a sense of shared ownership, where patients actively refer friends, celebrate milestones, and contribute to the clinic’s evolution.
“We tell them, ‘If you want this place to exist, I need your help,’” she says.
Redefining Growth in Aesthetic Medicine
Siemens is prioritizing stability, team well-being, and patient experience instead of scaling as quickly as possible. For now, that means growing slowly.
“Our bills are paid, our team is happy, and our patients are over the moon,” she said. “I’m very comfortable with slow growth.”
For Siemens, success is defined by how well the business aligns with the life she wants to build.
What Clinicians Can Learn from Her Journey
For clinicians considering a similar path, here are a few takeaways:
- Leadership starts early. Every role offers opportunities to influence outcomes.
- Invest in personal growth. Your business can only grow as much as you do.
- Learn outside your industry. Some of the most valuable lessons come from leaders in completely different fields.
- Define your version of success. Not every practice needs to scale.
- Build with intention. Clarity about your goals matters more than the growth strategy itself.
Kairos may grow or it may remain intentionally small. Either way, it will be shaped with the vision by the people within it. And for clinicians watching her journey, that may be the most valuable lesson of all.